ipv6 deployment in india - policies and...
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Ministry of Communications & ITDepartment of Telecommunications
IPv6 Deployment in India -Policies and Plans
Tokyo (Japan)
03.02.2011
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Department of Telecommunications (DoT)
The Department of Telecommunications is part of the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology ,
Main Functions Policy Formulation for the growth of telecommunication services in
India
Grant of licenses for various telecom services
Spectrum Management ,Regulation and monitoring Wireless usage
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Status and Growth of Indian Telecom Network
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Unprecedented Growth
• Indian Telecom sector has witnessed over 5 times growth in last five years
• 2nd largest telecom network in the world with more than 764 Million customers
• 100 million Internet users and180 million data users on mobile
• Mobile Number Portability (MNP) has been introduced in the country recently
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Deployment of IPv6 in India
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Need for IPv6
Only 18.5 million IPv4 addresses for a population of 1.2 billion in India.
• But the requirement for IP addresses will keep increasingwith new services, new networks, new applications.
• Telecommunications will be largest consumer of IPaddresses in coming years (Broadband, 3G, NGN, 4G, LTEetc.)
• IPv4 is a diminishing resource and is very costlycompared to IPv6 right now and will be more costlier withpassage of time
IPv6 is the only solution !6
Initiatives by Government
Various issues on IPv6 were deliberatedat different levels in DoT, Department ofInformation Technology (DIT), TelecomRegulatory Authority of India (TRAI) andother Stakeholders during previous yearsbased on which Telecom Commission in2009 took certain decisions for IPv6related activities in India
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Government of India’s Decision
All Government Departments to purchase IPv6 enabledequipments in future
To conduct Training Programmes for imparting knowledgein IPv6 domain.
Preparation of Migration Strategy and Migration Plan forthe country.
Telecommuinication Engineering Centre(TEC) to take upwith Equipment Manufacturers, Service Providers andother stake holders to deploy IPv6 Compliant Equipment
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IPv6 Related Activities undertaken by
Telecom Engineering Centre (TEC) under
Department of Telecommunications (DoT)
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Workshops Conducted by TECSr No. Date Venue Theme
1 21st July 2009 New Delhi Migration from IPv4 to IPv6 in India
2 15th Sept 2009 Bangalore IPv6 Transition and Greenfield Applications in India
3 22nd October2009
Chennai IPv6 as a New Platform for Innovation
4 27th Nov 2009 Mumbai IPv6: New opportunities for the Country
5 22nd Jan 2010 Kolkata IPv6 Migration Timeframe by Consensus or Mandate
These workshops were well attended by more than 1000 participants involving alltelecom service providers, manufacturers, industry associations, industries, govt.departments, educational institutions (IITs, IISc etc.)
Other Events• Training Programme with APNIC, Australia (25-26th Nov 2009, Mumbai)• International Summit with IPv6 Forum (15-16th Dec 2009, New Delhi)• Appointment of Nodal Officers in Central & State Govt. Departments for IPv6
Deployment10
Workshops Participation Statistics
CATEGORY Workshop-1
(New Delhi)
Workshop-2
(Bangalore)
Workshop-3
(Chennai)
Workshop-4
(Mumbai)
Workshop-5
(Kolkata)
Government
Organizations
74 72 70 30 45
Industries 53 45 49 51 37
Telecom Service
Providers/ISPs
19 21 25 20 22
Educational
Institutes
1 3 3 10 8
Others 103 99 93 39 18
TOTAL 250 240 240 150 130
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Some important extracts from Workshops
• Suitable policy framework by Govt. for smooth Transition.
• Specific deadlines for Transition
• Creation of IPv6 Task Force and working Groups
• More Training and awareness activities
• Guidance to SME service providers and organizations on implementingIPv6
• Govt. departments should take IP-based services from only IPv6 readyISPs after a certain period of time
• Promoting Pilot projects in “Greenfield Applications”
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Actionable Points of “National IPv6 Deployment Roadmap”
1. All major Service providers (having at least 10,000 internet customersor STM-1 bandwidth) will target to handle IPv6 traffic and offer IPv6services by December-2011
2. All central and State government ministries and departments,including its PSUs, shall start using IPv6 services by March-2012
3. Formation of the IPv6 Task Force with one Oversight Committee, oneSteering Committee and 10 working groups
“National IPv6 Deployment Roadmap” was released by the Government of India in July 2010.
based on various IPv6 activities and discussions
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MOUs/ Agreements/ Collaborations
Sr No.
Date Venue Event Description
1 1st
October 2009
New Delhi
MOU with the IPv6 Forum
To jointly participate in variousIPv6 activities in India inassociation with the IndiaChapter of the IPv6 Forum
2 1st
October 2010
New Delhi
MOU with the IPv6 Promotion Council, Japan
To collaborate on variousprojects and issues concerningthe deployment of IPv6 in India( e.g. Smart Building PilotProject)
3. - - IIT Kanpur Joint collaboration betweenTEC, IIT Kanpur and BSNL forworking on a pilot project on“Intelligent Transport Systemsusing IPv6”
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MOU with the IPv6 Promotion Council, Japan
Under this MOU following activities are envisaged:
Promote IPv6 for telecommunication services Smoothen the IPv6 transition process Assist vendors, operators and other stakeholders in the
transition Test Bed creation for IPv6 testing IPv6 applications in wireless sensors IPv6 in important sectors like Health, Transportation,
Environment, Public Safety Cooperation in IPv6 trails and IPv6 pilot projects
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Few Required IPv6 based Pilot projects in India
Logistics and Supply Chain (e.g. Railways, Shipping, Postal etc.) Intelligent Transport System (e.g. Road & Surface Transport) Intelligent Warfare (Ministry of Defence) Healthcare System (Ministry of Health) Tele-education (Ministry of Human Resource Development) Smartgrids (Ministry of Power) Smart Buildings (All Ministries) Sensor based Intelligent Systems (Weather Monitoring, Agriculture
etc)
1. Different Ministries, Government Departments and Organizations along withPrivate Sector will Work on these and similar Pilot Projects.
2. Many ministries/Departments don’t have enough computerization so they canjump start directly with IPv6 without going in for legacy IPv4 network
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Proposed IPv6 Deployment Plan for
Service Providers & Govt. Departments
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Timeframe of Activities by Service Providers
Sr. No.
Activity Proposed Target Date
1. Circulation of letters, guidelines, checklist , important pointsfrom roadmap etc. to all concerned within the organization
15.9.2010
2. Form a dedicated “IPv6 Transition Team” within theorganization
31.10.2010
3. Audit of Equipment Reports by other Agency 30.11.20104. Based on the Equipment Audit Reports, prepare an
Equipment replacement plan to phase out non-complianthardware and software.
31.12.2010
5. Based on the replacement plan, prepare a procurement plan 31.01.2011
6. Identify persons for IPv6 training and send them on training(Parallel Activity)
A continuous process
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Timeframe of Activities by Service Providers
Sr. No.
Activity Proposed Target Date
7. Initiate the process of procurement of hardware andsoftware as per the plans
31.03.2011
8. Set up a pilot test network for testing and training 31.05.2011
9. Equipment Procurement and deployment in the network 30.09.2011
10. Testing of hardware and software and migration ofapplications
15.12.2011
11. Launch of IPv6 Services 31.12.2011
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Timeframe of Activities by Govt. Departments
Sr. No. Activity Target Date
1. Appointment of State Nodal Officer 31.8.20102. Circulation of letters, guidelines, checklist etc. to all ministries /
organizations / educational institutions / PSUs etc. and orders onappointment of departmental nodal officers to all Departments
15.9.2010
3. Appointment of Next level Departmental Nodal Officers 30.9.20104. Form a “State Transition Team” consisting of concerned officers &
experts from stakeholders like service provider, vendors, softwaredevelopers etc.) for giving technical advice and look into issuesconcerned with transition to IPv6
31.10.2010
5. Call a meeting of all ministries, organizations, educationalinstitutions, PSUs etc. and discuss the following issues –a)Instructions issued by DoTb)Checklists issued by TECc)Annexure ‘A’ & ‘B’ of Roadmapd)Preparation of equipment reports
30.11.2010
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Timeframe of Activities by Govt. Departments
Sr. No.
Activity Target Date
6. Reports preparations based on activities in Sr. No. 5 31.12.20107. Audit of Equipment Reports by other Agency 15.01.20118. Based on the Equipment Audit Reports, prepare an Equipment
replacement plan to phase out non-compliant hardware andsoftware. Assistance may be taken from “State TransitionTeam”
15.02.2011
9. Based on the replacement plan, prepare a procurement plan for different ministries / departments
15.03.2011
10. Identify persons for IPv6 training and send them on training(Parallel Activity)
A continuous process
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Sr. No. Activity Proposed Target Date
11. Float tenders for procurement of hardware and software as perthe plans
15.04.2011
12. IPv6 Address Allocation Policy 30.06.2011
13. Set up a pilot test network either centrally or in each departmentfor testing and training
31.07.2011
14. Equipment Procurement and deployment in the network 31.10.201115. Testing of hardware and software and migration of applications 28.02.201216. Launch of IPv6 Services 31.03.2012
Timeframe of Activities by Govt. Departments
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Meetings for IPv6 Implementation and Important Issues
Many different meetings conducted with service providers, Central andState Government Departments and other stakeholders and followingissues emerged –
Consultancy required by almost all Government departments for IPv6Implementation
Vendors of mobile handsets have to be pursued for manufacture of IPv6compliant handsets
Vendors and application developers also to be pursued for developing andsupporting IPv6 applications
Proper IPv6 address Planning for India Urgent need for National Internet Registry (NIR) in India To put up a detailed FAQ on IPv6 transition on the website (Under
development) To give out a comprehensive list of IPv6 hardware and software
compliance of networking equipments to be used as a ready reference(Already released)
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India IPv6 Task Force(Structure & Functions of Working Groups)
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India IPv6 Task Force
1. Formation of IPv6 Task Force was approved by Governmentin July 2010. The IPv6 Task Force has the followingcommittees & working Groups
• Oversight Committee• Steering Committee• 10 working groups
2. Membership of the task Force has now been finalized by theGovernment
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Oversight Committee
Secretary(T), Chairman
Member(T), Vice Chairman
Advisor(T) DoT
Sr.DDG, TEC Senior Officers of
DoT/DIT/TEC
DDG( NT ), Convener
Industry Associations / Heads of Service Providers / Key Govt. Departments /
Educational Institutions / Industry Forums / eminent persons
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Steering Committee (To Head the Working Groups in Task Force)
Advisor(T)/Member(T)Chairman
Sr.DDG, TEC Vice Chairman
Senior Officers of DoT/ DIT/TEC
DDG( NT ), Convener
Industry Associations / Heads of Service Providers / Key Govt. Departments / Key
Educational Institutions / Industry Forums / eminent persons
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Structure of “India IPv6 Task Force”
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Lead & Co-Lead Organizations for Working Groups
Sr.No. Name of the Working Group Lead Service Provider /
Organization
Co‐Lead Organizations No. of Members
1. Training and Awareness WG BSNL CMAI, CISCO, TATA 21
2. IPv6 Network Implementation WG TEC CISCO, BSNL, SIFY, NIC 66
3. Standards and Specifications WG TEC CDOT, IPv6 Forum 20
4.. India6 Network WG Tata Communications
COAI, AUSPI, DoT, CISCO 22
5. Experimental IPv6 Network WG SIFY TEC, Juniper 11
6. Pilot Project WG DIT Tech Mahindra, ERNET 137. Applications support WG Tech Mahindra UTStarcom, CDOT, IAMAI 16
8. Knowledge Resource Development WG
ISPAI BSNL, IAMAI, NIXI 18
9. IPv6 Implementation in the Government WG
DoT TEC, M/o Railways, NASSCOM, CCAOI
130
10. Network Security WG DoT M/o Defence, MHA, IISc Bangalore 6
Note: Each working Group will be headed by a Lead Organization29
Functions of Different Working Groups
WG-1 (Training and Awareness for ~ 250,000 persons)•Hands-on trainings in association with APNIC, IISc and otherorganizations•IPv6 Certification programs for qualified engineers•Trainings for nodal officers from government•Conducting Workshops, seminars and conferences
WG-2 (IPv6 Network Implementation)•Studying the different network scenarios and make action plans forindividual service providers / organizations.
WG-3 (IPv6 Standards and Specifications)•Coordinate with TEC for development of common IPv6 specifications forthe country, which will be followed by all stakeholders.
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Functions of Different Working Groups contd..
WG-4 (India6 Network)•To study, plan and prepare a project report for building a nationwide IPv6Carrier Network called “Transition Pipe”, which will be entrusted to one ofthe operators
WG-5 (Experimental IPv6 Network)•Study, plan and prepare to build this network, which can then be used forexperimentation by different vendors and organizations both from the publicand the private sector.
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Functions of Different Working Groups contd..
WG-6 (Pilot Projects on “Greenfield Applications”)•Prepare Plans, project reports, funding models and coordinate withdifferent government and service providers to take up the deployment ofsuch pilot projects to demonstrate the IPv6 capabilities
WG-7 (Application Support)•Facilitate the transition of existing content and applications anddevelopment of new content and applications on IPv6.
WG-8 (Knowledge Resource Development)• To ensure active participation of the educational institutes• Involved in the change of curriculum to include study of IPv6 as a
subject.
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Functions of Different Working Groups contd..
WG-9 (IPv6 Implementation in Government)• Pursue with different government departments for implementation of
IPv6.• Guidance on solving problems related to implementation of IPv6• Members will be drawn from nodal officers in various government
departments for active participation
WG-10 (Network Security)• Research on Security related issues in IPv6• Development of security protocols specific to India for use in Indian
Networks
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Workgroups: Activities Completed So Far &
Next Steps…..
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WG1: Training & Awareness
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Responsibilities
• Hands on training in association with APNIC, IISc and other organizations
• IPv6 Certification Program for qualified engineers
• Network Engineers Training
•Training for Nodal Officers from Government
• Conducting Conferences, Seminars and workshops
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Scope
• There are about 100 different central government departments / ministries
• Each department/ministry has about at least 100 different units including PSUs and their wings etc
• There are 34 states/UTs and each one has about 100 different state government ministries, departments and PSUs
• By conservative estimates, even if 5 persons are required at each place the demand is a staggering 67,000 persons (Approx.) to be trained on IPv6
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Readiness of BSNL
BSNL has 18 regional training centers spread geographically throughout India
BSNL has already trained 60 trainers of 18 training centers .
BSNL is setting up 2 IPv6 test lab Connectivity for all training RTTCs and above test labs for
Remote Testing and Monitoring.
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WG3: Standards & Specifications
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IPv6 Standards for India
• TEC is developing the Standards Document for IPv6 Testing, whichwill be released by March 2011
• TEC also proposes to set up IPv6 Test bed for testing thesestandards
• Other organizations can also set up the Test Beds and apply foraccreditation to TEC/IPv6 Ready Logo for testing these standards
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WG4: India6 Network
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India6 Network Phase wise approach
The activities of the India6 Network Working Group will be carried out in 5 phasesAwareness &
SurveyNeeds
Awareness survey and roadmap
India6 Network Requirement
Building of the India6 Network requirement
summary
Network BuildBuilding of the India6 Network
Traffic and Application Migration IPv6 Traffic
Application testing and migration to the
India6 Network
SupportOngoing support and optimization
• India6 Network approach has been defined
• The requirements and applications will drive the network build rather than other way around
• Govt. and Academia must take the lead in creating the innovation culture in India 42
WG5: Experimental IPv6 Network
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Objectives
Create an IPV6 ready Experimental network for
• Service providers to Plan / Test their V6 migration
• Government Agencies to Plan / Test their V6 migration
• Enterprise Customers to Plan / Test their V6 migration
• Equipment / Application suppliers to test their product readiness under customer scenarios
Work on creating a logo lab in India
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Network Design Guidelines
Network to support simulation of various user/client and application/server environments like in
• Enterprise Network scenarios
• Consumer network scenarios
• Equipment suppliers testing scenarios
• Application Providers testing scenarios
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WG6: Pilot Projects on “Greenfield Applications”
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Need for Pilot projects
IPv6 Adoption Challenges
Large Investments in Current IPv4 Infrastructure -
Uncertainty of Market Demand
Lack of IPv6 Skills
Lack of IPv6 ready products and solutions
Lack of Government incentives
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IPv6 Pilot Project - Goals
Technology demonstration – Build confidence in IPv6 as a technology
Innovation – Entrepreneurship, New ideas and solutions
• Showcase application of IPv6 in e-governance/citizen services in cities/districts/states – Create market demand
• Showcase that IPv6 applications can impact/enhance the lives of our citizens – Create market demand
• Showcase solutions – which result in RoI48
A few IPv6 pilot projects planned
Initiate IPv6 pilot projects across at least across one state from eastern, northern, western and southern part of India.
Proposed states: Bihar, Uttarakhand, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh, Tamilnadu
A pilot project would be executed across at least two states
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A few IPv6 pilot projects planned
Sector Pilot projectIT Infrastructure IPv6 enablement of State Data Center Infrastructure
(Including switches, network component, monitoring, SSDG, security, access control, Edge, Cloud, Green DC)
IT Infrastructure IPv6 based Backbone Testbed
Citizen Services IPv6 Enabled Citizen Services over Secure Data Center
Citizen services Delivery of Citizen Services over IPv6 enabled SDG (issuance of Income Certificate, Child School performance monitoring System)
Agriculture IPv6 enablement of Wireless Sensors for Agriculture use (Example in a greenhouse to monitor temperature and moisture and turn on relevant devices to control these parameters)
Healthcare IPv6 based Healthcare/tele-medicineElectronic Health records linked to Aadhaar and stored centrallyProviding health based benefits to beneficiaries using IPv6 enabled devices and authentication based on Aadhaar
Education IPv6 based e-learning system
Electoral process Internet based voting using Aadhaar50
Milestones
Finalize Pilot projects – 1 Month Scope Location Size
Get funding approvals – 3 Months Resources Logistics
Execution of projects – 12 – 18months
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Deliverables
Demonstration of IPv6 enabled infrastructure, Applications and services
Creation of IPv6 resource pool
Scalable solutions which can be adopted across the nation
Role model District/Village/State around IPv6 solutions
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WG7: Application Support
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Areas Impacted by IPv6
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IPv6 across applications State wide Wide area Network (SWAN) State Wide Data Center (SDC) Common services Center (CSC) E-Governance services Citizen services
• UID services• Ration card services• Passport services• Income tax services• Electoral services• Police services• Education services• Healthcare services• Energy monitoring• And so forth ….
E-governance/Citizen
services Applications
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IPv6 Consulting – Key Deliverables
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IPv6 Solution Showcase
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R.M. Agarwal, DDG(NT) B.K.Nath, Director(SA)Department of Telecommunications Telecommunication Engineering CentreEmail: [email protected] Email: [email protected]: +91- 9868133440 Mob: +91-9868137003
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